“Wild mind isn’t just your mind; it’s the whole world moving through you. With it, you give voice to a very large life, even though you might only be talking about your grandmother’s closet with its particular wallpaper and floor. It’s an awareness of everything through one thing.” —Natalie Goldberg, Interview in the Sun

Natalie Goldberg teaches people to fall in love with their life. She is an author, poet, teacher, and painter, for whom the writing and spiritual lives are interconnected. She has written twelve books, including Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within (1986), which broke open the world of creativity and started a revolution in the way we practice writing in this country. The book has sold over a million and a half copies and has been translated into fourteen languages. In the sequel book, Wild Mind, Goldberg continues to teach her method of writing by taking the writer beyond craft to the true source of creative power: the wild mind that is “raw, full of energy, alive and hungry.” In Thunder and Lighting, Goldberg takes us on to the next step in the writing process: turning our flashes of inspiration—”the thunder and lightning of creation”—into a polished piece of work. In her newest book, The True Secret of Writing: Connecting Life with Language (2013), Goldberg provides a fresh new insight into writing accessible to all readers.

As a memoirist, Goldberg takes us into her study and practice of Zen Buddhism. In Long Quiet Highway: Waking Up in America, she captures both the moments of illumination and the long discipline of daily practice, the hilarity of error and the grief of our resistance to change. Her most recent memoir is The Great Failure: My Unexpected Path to Truth.

Her other books include the novel Banana Rose; Living Color: A Writer Paints Her World, about painting as a second art form; Top of My Lungs, containing forty poems, twenty of her paintings in color, and an essay, “How Poetry Saved My Life.”

With the filmmaker Mary Feidt, she completed the documentary Tangled Up In Bob, about Bob Dylan’s childhood on the Iron Range in northern Minnesota. She is “surprised to find his songs in the dirt, the swamps, the iron mines, in the flatness, poplar trees, bars, and gas stations. She discovers the seeds of his creativity in his ordinary childhood…and most importantly she learns the secret of coming home.” —tangledupinbob.com

Goldberg has been teaching seminars in writing as a practice for the last thirty years. People from around the world attend her life-changing workshops, and she has a reputation as a great teacher. The Oprah Winfrey Show sent a film crew to spend the day with Natalie for a segment on spirituality that covered her writing, teaching, painting, and walking meditation. Her lively paintings can be viewed at the Ernesto Mayans gallery on Canyon Road in Santa Fe. She currently lives in northern New Mexico.

Natalie Goldberg is the author of twelve books, including Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within, which has sold over a million and a half copies and been translated into fourteen languages. Her latest book is The True Secret of Writing: Connecting Life with Language. She is also the author of the novel Banana Rose; Living Color: A Writer Paints Her World; and Top of My Lungs, containing forty poems, twenty of her paintings in color, and an essay, “How Poetry Saved My Life.” With the filmmaker Mary Feidt, she completed the documentary Tangled Up In Bob, about Bob Dylan’s childhood on the Iron Range in northern Minnesota.

THE TRUE SECRET OF WRITING: CONNECTING LIFE WITH LANGUAGE (2013)

“The True Secret of Writing is a rich voyage, a priceless distillation of her accumulated wisdom and experience as a writer, coach, and instructor on mindfulness. This lovely volume will have a permanent place on my writing shelf.” —Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone

Sit. Walk. Write. These are the barest bones of Natalie Goldberg’s revolutionary writing and life practice, which she presents here in book form for the first time. A whole new slant on writing that she developed since the publication of her classic Writing Down the Bones. True Secret workshops have been limited until now to small, intensive groups at a remote center in the rural Southwest. In The True Secret of Writing, Goldberg makes this popular seminar available to any reader.

LIVING COLOR: A WRITER PAINTS HER WORLD (1997)
In this series of autobiographical essays accompanied by paintings (or autobiographical paintings accompanied by essays), Natalie Goldberg examines the relationship between her writing, her art, and her life. Known for her books about writing (Writing Down the Bones in particular), Goldberg once used painting as others do a walk in the woods or a martini before dinner—as a way to unwind after a day of work. Fearing dilettantism, she quit painting altogether, only to find that when she stopped painting, she lost something else. Goldberg says, “I gave up a deep source of my writing, that place in me where I can let my work flow.” Once again she embraced visual expression, which she realized she had used “as a metaphor or mirror to break out of something [she] didn’t understand in writing.” The paintings have a colorful, folksy feel; the book is an interesting exploration of the influences that the various aspects of our lives have on our work and vice versa. —Amazon.com

WRITING DOWN THE BONES: FREEING THE WRITER WITHIN (1986)
“The book that started a revolution in the way people think about writing. The secret of creativity, Natalie Goldberg makes clear, is to subtract rules for writing, not add them…. Proof that she knows what she’s talking about is abundant in her own sentences. They flow with speed and grace and accuracy and simplicity…. It’s the simple style of a Zen archer who looks like he’s not even aiming, yet sends arrow after arrow to the bull’s eye, time after time.” —Robert Pirsig, author of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

WRITING DOWN THE BONES: FREEING THE WRITER WITHIN (excerpt from nonfiction)

When I teach a beginning class, it is good. I have to come back to a beginner’s mind, the first way I thought and felt about writing. In a sense, that beginner’s mind is what we must come back to every time we sit down and write. There is no security, no assurance that because we wrote something good two months ago, we will do it again. Actually, every time we begin, we wonder how we ever did it before. Each time is a new journey with no maps.

So when I teach a writing group, I have to tell the story all over again and remember that the students are hearing it for the first time. I must begin at the very beginning.

BANANA ROSE(excerpt from novel)

I never paid much attention to Gauguin’s muscles. And his kisses? They weren’t all that memorable, though sure, I liked kissing him. It had more to do with water. The first time I saw him, even before I spoke to him, I felt it. Then, over the course of our relationship, I felt all kinds of water: a slow river, shallow and muddy, like the Green River flowing through the red canyonlands in Utah; the hard sparkle of water in a creek after the snow has melted and it catches the sun or even the moon’s cold light; also the kind of water that would come out of the faucet in my family’s place in Brooklyn. I’d stand in the kitchen, leaning on the sink, waiting for the water from the spout to run clear, and then I’d fill a tall drinking glass with it. As I drank, I’d smell fresh green parsley sprigs. All of this about water woke in me when I first laid my eyes on Gauguin.